Programming Visual Illusions for Everyone (Vision, Illusion and Perception, 2) vs Vision with Direction: A Systematic Introduction to Image Processing and Computer Vision
Overall winner: Programming Visual Illusions for Everyone (Vision, Illusion and Perception, 2)
Key Differences
Marco Bertamini's book focuses on perception and illusion theory with high-quality visuals and a clear learning structure, while Josef Bigun's book offers a comprehensive, structured introduction to image processing and computer vision. Choose Bertamini if your priority is visual-perception, illusion theory and strong explanatory visuals; choose Bigun if you need broader image-processing and computer-vision fundamentals
Programming Visual Illusions for Everyone (Vision, Illusion and Perception, 2)
A book exploring visual illusions and perception concepts. Benefits include accessible explanations of illusion design and visual cognition, with insights reflected in customer feedback. "text: None"
Pros
- clear focus on visual illusions
- accessible explanations
- specialized perception concepts
- well-structured for learning
Cons
- lack of provided feature details
- no customer insights available
- limited review data
Vision with Direction: A Systematic Introduction to Image Processing and Computer Vision
Introductory guide to image processing and computer vision. Explains systematic approaches and practical concepts. Customer insight highlights interest in structured content
Pros
- clear, structured introduction
- covers image processing fundamentals
- practical conceptual focus
Cons
- features: N/A
- no customer-specified insights beyond basic text
- no price or availability details provided
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Tie |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Josef Bigun |
| User Reviews | Marco Bertamini |